President Barack Obama is right. He told Major Garrett of CBS this week that “Mr. Putin’s
decisions aren’t just bad for Ukraine. Over the long term, they’re going to be bad for Russia.”

I believe that Vladimir Putin’s adventures in Russia’s “near abroad” are a mistake. Indeed, they
are part of a whole tapestry of wrongheadedness. It’s also bad for the Kremlin to crush dissent,
censor the news and hobble the economy by handing it over to oligarchs and a kleptocratic
bureaucracy. Putin’s scapegoating and demonizing of gays isn’t only morally wrong, it’s not in
Russia’s long-term interests, either. That Putin prefers to use his oil and gas assets as a
political weapon abroad and an excuse not to diversify his economy at home has me Googling the
Russian word for
boneheaded.

But here’s the thing: Putin disagrees. And on the matter of Ukraine — like so much else — he is
immune to persuasion. All of the condemnations, communiqués, joint statements and other diplomatic
lamentations, not to mention the late-night bull sessions on the phone with Obama, will not shake
him from his views of what is best for Russia.

In a sense, arguing with the Russian bear is like arguing with a real bear. No matter how
eloquently you explain to the bear that it should not eat your face, it’s going to eat your face if
it wants to eat your face — that is, if you do nothing tangible to stop it.

Obama seems to think that’s what he’s been doing. He told CBS, “Each time Russia takes these
kinds of steps that are designed to destabilize Ukraine and violate their sovereignty, there are
going to be consequences.”

Unfortunately, the credibility of Obama’s “consequences” took a big hit when he was unwilling —
or unable — to make good on his vow that the use of chemical weapons in Syria would amount to a “
red line” for the U.S.

And then there are the consequences Putin has already faced as a result of his annexation of
Crimea. The Obama administration did impose sanctions targeted at a few of Putin’s henchmen and
cronies. They publicly laughed them off, but it was worth a try.

Beyond that, though, Obama’s consequences haven’t even been inconsequential; they’ve had the
opposite of their intended effect. Rather than send the Ukrainians weapons or useful intelligence,
we sent them a bunch of MREs (“Meals Ready to Eat”). And even that we were unwilling to do in too
provocative a way. We didn’t use Air Force cargo planes, but rather sent the snacks in by civilian
trucks. Meanwhile, pleas from allies to deploy more assets to Poland and other front-line NATO
states were rebuffed by the White House.

On April 12,
The Wall Street Journal reported that the White House was still weighing requests from the
Ukrainian government for other supplies such as “medical kits, uniforms, boots and military
socks."

“You want to calibrate your chest-thumps,” a senior military official told
The Journal, explaining this step-by-step approach. “He does something else in Ukraine, we
release the socks.”

Now, imagine you are Vladimir Putin. You illegally sent Russian soldiers without military
insignia into Ukraine (a major violation of the Geneva Conventions). You lied about doing so at the
time (Putin has since boasted that he did exactly that). And your aide brings in the news that a “
senior military official” of the United States has announced that if you take another step toward
carving up Ukraine, the U.S. will be forced to give the Ukrainians the socks they’ve been asking
for.

Call me crazy, but I doubt the response will be “Comrades! Call it off! We can’t take the chance
that the Ukrainians will have warm, dry feet when we invade Kiev!”

Consequences that are not sufficiently painful or sufficiently scary aren’t consequences in the
sense Obama means at all. They’re invitations. It’s like trying to get a bear to leave you alone by
throwing salmon at it.

I entirely understand that Americans are war-weary, and for good reason. But has it really
gotten to the point where the U.S. military now defines “chest-thumping” as unleashing the socks of
war?